Stage of the Ravalli-Polson run in front of the A.M. Sterling Company store in Ronan, Montana. Twp men sit on the stage coach in the drivers' seat. A passenger sits in the open coach. Men stand around the coach and the store.

Farming near Hinsdale, Montana. Men walk with two-horse teams pulling farm implements. Other men stand near the teams. An axe lies on the ground in the foreground. The photo appears to be hand-colored.

Crash of a T-airplane (transport?) in the Bitterroot National Forest, Montana. A broken-up airplane rests on large rocks on a hill (a talus slope?) in a forest. Dick Johnson and Clarence Sutliff both survived.

Carl Brady's last tussock moth spray flight. Harvard, Idaho. Photograph of one plane on a grassy field with another plane in the distance spraying or dropping pesticide on a forest. One man can be seen standing in field.

Two men playing cards in front of small shack at French Gulch, Montana. The wood-frame shack is built into the side of a hill, and a stove-pipe sticks out of the roof of the building. Trees are behind the shack. Pans hang on the outside of the...

M. Pablo, the Buffalo King, sits on a horse. Buffalo graze in the pasture near the rider. Houses can be seen in the background. The photograph was probably taken near St. Ignatius. Image from stereograph.

Aerial view of the Crystal Sugar Factory and surrounding area, west of Missoula, Montana. A tall smokestack can be seen on the building in the center of the factory complex. The complex is surrounded by open fields.

Smelters of Anaconda, Montana in background of image. In foreground men appear to be hammering (perhaps for blasting?) In the middle of the image a horse-drawn wagon hauls away rock as an empty wagon arrives. Woodworth Photo (No. 245). Photograph...

Tractor in foreground bringing another 'drag' of logs to the landing. A logging train is in the background with a jammer on right end. Logs are being loaded onto rail cars. Anaconda Copper Mining, Woodworth operations, Chamberlain Creek.

Two smokestacks tower over nearby buildings. Smoke rises from the shorter stack. Caption on original photo: 'Largest and highest stack in the world - height 585 feet, Washoe Smelter, Anaconda, Montana.' The tall stack, a flue-gas stack, was known...